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Issue 1071 coverPSYCHOBIOLOGY OF POSTTRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER A Decade of Progress Volume 1071 published July 2006
Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 1071: 203–215 (2006). doi: 10.1196/annals.1364.015
Copyright © 2006 by the New York Academy of Sciences
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Articles by NEYLAN, T. C.
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Neuroendocrine Regulation of Sleep Disturbances in PTSD

THOMAS C. NEYLANa, CHRISTIAN OTTEb, RACHEL YEHUDAc AND CHARLES R. MARMARa

a University of California, San Francisco, California, USA b University Hospital Hamburg-Eppendorf, Germany c Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, USA

Key Words: posttraumatic stress disorder • sleep • cortisol • corticotropin-releasing-factor

Address for correspondence: Thomas C. Neylan, M.D., University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco DVAMC 116P, 4150 Clement Street, San Francisco, CA 94121, Voice: 415-750-6961.  e-mail: Thomas.Neylan{at}ucsf.edu

Studies that have conducted quantitative analysis of the sleep electroencephalogram (EEG) have demonstrated decreased delta sleep in PTSD. Elevations in both hypothalamic (neurohormonal) and extrahypothalamic (neurotransmitter) corticotropin releasing factor (CRF) release is associated with decreased delta sleep activity. We present data from several studies examining the effect of metyrapone administration on the sleep EEG in PTSD and control subjects. Plasma ACTH, cortisol, and 11-deoxycorticol were obtained the morning following polysomnographic sleep recordings before and after metyrapone administration. Delta sleep was measured by period amplitude analysis. The results demonstrate: a) decreased delta sleep in male subjects with PTSD; b) metyrapone administration resulted in an activation of the sleep EEG and a robust decrease in quantitative delta sleep; c) the sleep and endocrine (increase in ACTH) responses to metyrapone were significantly decreased in PTSD in two different study samples; and d) the metyrapone-related disruption to sleep in both samples was predicted by the increase in ACTH measured the following morning. These findings strongly suggest that the delta sleep response to metyrapone is a measure of the brain response to a hypothalamic CRF challenge. The attenuated delta sleep and endocrine response to metyrapone challenge in PTSD is consistent with a model of enhanced negative feedback regulation or downregulation of CRF receptors in an environment of chronically increased CRF activity.






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